About the Fellowship

Research Fellows are required to be in residence at Georgetown for a two-year period. The fellowship permits fellows to complete a full year of research and writing before they apply to teaching positions. During a fellow's tenure at Georgetown, he or she will be expected to produce at least one major academic piece of scholarship.

Each fellow works with two or more assigned mentors. The mentors will work closely with the fellow in the development of his or her writing project or projects, as well as his or her teaching at Georgetown.

In the first year of the fellowship, each Research Fellow will second chair a black-letter law JD course in the area of his or her study. The course will be taught by a regular faculty member. As second chair, the Fellow will attend classes, hold office hours and teach a few of the class meetings. The goals are to familiarize the Fellow with a course that he or she is going to teach, to provide some experience in the classroom, and to provide mentorship in the craft of teaching.

In the Spring semester of the Fellows second year at Georgetown (the fourth semester of the fellowship), he or she will teach a 3-credit version of the same course in Georgetown’s LLM program. The goal here is again to give the Fellow experience teaching a course that the Fellow is likely to teach in his or her first academic job. The fourth semester is a period during which fellows have typically already gone through the most taxing phase of the AALS hiring process. During this period, the Fellow holds the title “Guest Lecturer.

Research Fellows are important participants in the Fellows Seminar and Workshops, and are expected to attend both for all four semesters of the fellowship. Research Fellows also have the opportunity to attend scholarly symposia, lectures, and brown bag seminars for Georgetown Law faculty, to audit any courses, and to participate in the other activities of the Georgetown Fellows Collaborative.

Benefits

The Fellowship offers a competitive stipend, eligibility for staff health insurance, and shared office space. It does not include a travel budget or administrative support.

FAQs

Can I teach seminars or other courses as a Law Research Fellow?

Yes you can, provided the seminar and syllabus meet with the approval of the Associate Dean for the JD Program and it is planned for after the first semester of your residence. Fellows have also chosen to co-teach lecture courses with Georgetown Law faculty members.

Any such teaching will be in addition to the Research Fellowship’s basic teaching requirements described above: serving as second chair in the first year, and teaching a 3-credit version of the same course in the LLM program in the fourth semester. Fellows who choose to teach additional courses receive great personal and professional rewards, but no additional pay.

May I apply if I am currently earning a PhD or similar degree and will not graduate by the time the fellowship residence begins?

Yes. A number of past fellows have been in the process of finishing up their dissertations when they began their residency. If you are in this category, please explain in your application materials (either the personal statement or research agenda) (1) where you currently are in your dissertation, including when you expect to defend, and (2) how your dissertation work relates to your plans for scholarship during the fellowship.

I have been admitted to the LL.M. or SJD Program at Georgetown – can I apply to GLRF to switch programs and earn my degree with a tuition waiver?

In general, no. Georgetown’s LL.M. program is based on course work and the Law Research Program is intended for scholars who will spend their time on independent research and writing. The SJD program also has a course work component during the first year that does not match the goals and structure of the Law Research Program. You must apply separately to all programs at the Law Center and cannot transfer into the Law Research Fellowship from any other program.

Can I apply to more than one program at Georgetown Law Center?

Yes, but please be thoughtful about which programs actually fit your interests. If you apply to more than one Law Center program – including any academic or fellowship program – please indicate all programs to which you have applied on each application.

Is a PhD required for applicants?

No. There is no policy of excluding candidates without graduate degrees and in recent years a number of fellows have been selected who had only JD degrees.

I am a current 3L student – do I have a realistic chance of being offered the Law Research Fellowship?

All candidates with a serious, passionate interest in legal scholarship are encouraged to apply. It is unusual, but not unheard of, for a current JD student applicant to be selected for the program. Current students are at a disadvantage only in the sense that they generally have not had sufficient time to write and develop a scholarly agenda. If you have maximized your opportunities for academic writing and research during (or before) law school and you are committed to becoming an academic, please do apply.

Is the fellowship supervised?

The fellowship provides supervision of your research and writing through mentoring, but there is no direct supervision of your daily work routine. Fellows share offices and often enjoy working on campus because scholarship can otherwise be lonely work. But there is no monitoring of hours spent in the building. Some fellows write primarily at home throughout their residency.

Must I physically reside in Washington, D.C. during the “residency”?

The goal of the Fellows Collaborative at Georgetown is to create a community of emerging scholars. In line with these goals, Law Research Fellows are expected to have a regular (which need not mean constant) presence on campus and at events during the fellowship. Especially important is attendance at the weekly Fellows Workshop and Seminar all four semesters of the fellowship. Fellows are generally expected to be available for events and meetings and to work with their designated mentors fairly closely.

Can I perform independent research for other institutions while in residence?

The Research Fellowship is a full-time job, and may not be held with a separate job or fellowship. As noted above, PhD students may continue to work on their dissertations if the dissertation is in progress when the fellowship begins. At the same time, the goal of the fellowship is to generate one or more law review articles, and in general, it’s expected that your time at Georgetown will be spent developing publishable legal scholarship. Please indicate any other ongoing or expected research obligations on your application.

Does Georgetown hire Law Research Fellows for tenure track professor positions?

Georgetown does not, as a general practice, consider fellows for tenure track positions, although exceptions have been made in extraordinary circumstances.

What is the job success rate for past Law Research Fellows?

Past Law Research Fellows have been very successful in securing tenure track teaching jobs. In the past few years, Law Research Program alums have taken positions at University of Georgia School of Law, SUNY Buffalo Law School, the University of Minnesota Law School, Northwestern University Law School, the University of San Diego School of Law and Yale Law School.

Can I talk to any past fellows about their experience in the program?

Yes. If you are interested in contacting GLRF alums, please contact GLRF@law.georgetown.edu for an updated list of contacts.

Does Georgetown Law offer housing to Fellows?

No. Because they are employees of the University, student housing is not open to Fellows.